SSC Photo & Signature Resizer
SSC CGL/CHSL/MTS 2026 Compliant • Official Pixel Ratio • 100% Offline
SSC Photo & Signature Image Resizer Online
Are you submitting a Staff Selection Commission application online through the official SSC portal? One of the most common issues applicants face is uploading their passport photograph and scan of their signature. The SSC system has a strict validation protocol. Unless your photo is exactly 3.5 x 4.5 cm (20-50KB) and signature is exactly 4.0 x 2.0 cm (10-20KB), your upload will fail.
OptiKit's SSC Image Compressor solves this problem. It allows applicants to crop, resize, and compress their passport photos and signature scans completely in the browser without uploading any files to server-side queues, keeping your personal documents fully secure.
SSC Official Compliance Table
| Asset | Exact Dimension | Maximum File Size | Format |
|---|---|---|---|
| Applicant Photo | 413 x 531 pixels (3.5x4.5 cm) | 20KB - 50 KB | JPEG / JPG only |
| Applicant Signature | 472 x 236 pixels (4x2 cm) | 10KB - 20 KB | JPEG / JPG only |
SSC Image Compressor FAQs
For SSC (Staff Selection Commission) applications like CGL, CHSL, and MTS, the photograph must be 3.5 x 4.5 cm (approx. 413 x 531 pixels) and the file size must be strictly between 20KB and 50KB. The signature scan must be 4.0 x 2.0 cm (approx. 472 x 236 pixels) and the file size must be strictly between 10KB and 20KB, in JPG/JPEG format.
The most common reasons for SSC signature rejections are: (1) File size is less than 10KB or more than 20KB, (2) The signature is cropped with too much empty border, or (3) The background is not clean white paper, or blue ink was used instead of black ink.
Yes. OptiKit is a client-side tool. Your photos and signature scans are processed entirely within your browser memory. No data is sent to our servers, keeping your documents 100% private.
No. The Staff Selection Commission guidelines strictly forbid wearing spectacles, caps, or headphones in passport photographs. Both ears must be clearly visible and the face should have a neutral expression.
